“Monday, Monday…so good to me.” So sang The Mamas and the Papas, though I’ve always thought those lyrics were strange. I mean, who thinks that way about Monday? The singer(s) is/are disabused of their fondness for Mondays already by the end of the first verse, at least if I follow its meaning, but I’ve never met anyone, as far as I can remember, who expressed such initial fondness for Monday, the beginning of the school/work week.
Looking back, I myself am probably the person who came closest to feeling that way of all the people I’ve known, back when I was in grade school and high school. I’ve never had a great relationship with idle time, honestly, and I liked to learn, so Monday was good. Also, my friends were at school.
I don’t know what to write about today, to be honest. I’m working on my “project” of course, and taking steps toward its resolution. I don’t think very much has changed yet, if anything. I can certainly tell you that, so far, my pain has not diminished. But I wouldn’t expect it to have disappeared so quickly with minimal (if any) physical alteration.
I’m getting a bit lost about things with which to fill my mental time. I’m not really reading much anymore, fiction or nonfiction. I did start rereading Unanimity: Book I over the last few days. I’m liking it, as far as it goes, though I appreciate when we leave Charley Banks’s point of view and get into the heads of the various other characters. Charley is both the initial protagonist and the definite villain of the book, and boy does he do some truly horrible stuff, and it can be disquieting to be in his POV.
I’ve said to others that while of course the villain and title character of The Vagabond does or means to do more terrible things and more willfully so than Charley, the horror in The Vagabond is mainly supernatural style horror. Charley, on the other hand, does horrific things that humans could, in principle, do to other humans. In that sense, it’s a quasi-realistic horror story. It’s not fully realistic, like Solitaire, but superficially nothing flagrantly supernatural happens.
Mind you, though it may carry the trappings of sci-fi horror, the things that happen in Unanimity are, in my mind at least, really not scientifically plausible, so I consider it supernatural horror. This is in contrast to The Chasm and the Collision, which seems like a fantasy adventure story but which is, if you look closely, a science fiction story. It’s wildly speculative science fiction, but so is Stranger in a Strange Land.
Anyway, I obviously don’t have much of consequence to cover. It’s not as though my discussion is going to give anyone any new insights into my books, because no more than a handful of people have ever read (or ever will read) any of my books. So I’m mostly just spitting in a high wind and seeing where it lands…which won’t matter, because no matter where it lands, it’s almost immediately going to dry out and be nothing.
Whatever. I apologize for my constant grumpiness. I am in pretty significant pain already today, but I’m trying* to work on it. I’m constantly trying‒trying new shoes, new socks, new spandex joint braces, new medicine combinations, new forms of exercise and ways of doing the exercise I already do, avoiding specific foods, all that stuff and more. I do not just saunter through life shrugging about my pain and my depression and my horrible social anxiety and giving up and not trying to improve. I don’t give up on tasks very easily, and I try hard to be as rigorous in my attempts as is feasible in one life without the ability to do controlled (let alone blinded) trials.
I’m not optimistic about good outcomes when it comes to my present goal/strategy/plan of either improving my pain or killing myself. People who say that, after enough torture, someone will beg for death are not lying. Everyone has their limits, though some people’s limits are awe-inspiring, and death comes to them before they break. But to have that strength requires some kind of meaning or purpose or at least a social connection.
We’ve all surely seen human interest reports of people who face terminal (or merely deadly) illnesses or accidents or losses but keep upbeat and positive and either defeat their illness or come to terms with it or die with dignity in an inspiring manner. Such stories almost always (in my limited sample, anyway) show people who have strong social supports, of friends or families or groups with solidarity and purpose.
You never see shows about the people who are alone and face a terminal or painful illness without even medical insurance or friends or family or other support nearby. That’s because those people die like they lived‒alone and unnoticed. Also, one can’t easily sell advertising with an after-school special about the secluded man who dies of complications of cancer and is only found when his rent is overdue or because the neighbors make a complaint about the smell that turns out to be his rotting corpse.
That’s enough for today, I think. I’m sure you’re all inspired and uplifted by my beautiful words (ha ha). I hope that you are inspired and uplifted by something, anyway.
It may be a fool’s errand, philosophically, to try even to begin to discern who deserves happiness. But heck, you might as well try to be happy if you can, as long as you’re not doing it by making other people less happy. Mutual exchange to mutual benefit is entirely possible, and is responsible for many if not most of the good and pleasant things we have in the world. The universe may be truly zero sum and zero outcome in the end‒if the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics holds true‒but it can nevertheless have a positive integral, the sum of the area under the curve across time. It is mathematically possible.
There’s nothing that guarantees it, of course. It can also have a negative overall integral in principle. Whether that will be the case or the other will depend, at least locally, on human behavior and choices.
I’m not optimistic.

*Fuck you, Yoda, you’re just wrong about the “trying” thing. It was your self-important arrogance that contributed more than anyone else’s input, to the decadence of the Jedi that left them vulnerable to the Sith.

I’m with you on Yoda.
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